Free Read Novels Online Home

A Warrior's Soul (Highland Heartbeats Book 8) by Aileen Adams (12)

12

“I never should’ve let her out of my sight,” Brice growled through gritted teeth, using every foul word and expression he’d ever learned to silently curse her for her treachery.

“Ye didn’t know she would do this. Do not blame yourself. We’re all equally guilty in this.” Rodric spat on the ground. “I have to admit, I don’t know how we’ll ever find her now.”

“She tried this last night,” Brice admitted. It mattered little anymore. He was no longer trying to keep their relations civil.

“What?” Rodric hissed, turning to him. “You didna tell us of this? Why would you keep such an important thing secret?”

“I wanted to smooth things over with the lass,” Brice nearly shouted. “I stopped her and told her I wouldna tell anyone; it could be between us. How was I to know she would use me like this?”

“Perhaps you could’ve told me, at least, without letting her know you had?” Rodric challenged. “And I would’ve known to watch her more closely. Damn it all.”

“I know. You can blame me all you like later.” Brice turned away, all but yelling for the girl to return.

Aside from the fact that they would lose the payment from Remington, she would surely get herself killed out there. Hadn’t he already warned her?

Fergus and Quinn had moved off to the north and south, the two of them taking turns calling out for Alana. They would blame him, too. All of them would, and they’d be correct to do so.

Why had he remained silent over her attempt? They had a job to perform, and only with honesty could they be successful. That meant sharing everything with each other.

And it was her fault. She’d taken advantage of him.

If he found her, he’d kill her.

A scream pierced the air.

His head snapped up.

She was in danger, and he had to save her.

“Alana!” He ran in the direction the scream seemed to come from. “Where are ye, Alana?”

“Help me!” she shrieked.

His head snapped back and forth, his eyes and ears trained for any sign. It was dark, the trees close together in clusters which blocked the light and broke any sort of view he might still be allowed.

“Where is she?” Rodric panted when he caught up, having run to follow Brice’s progress.

“How would I know?” Brice asked. Panic grew with every passing moment. “Alana! Tell me where ye are!”

“A boar!” she shrieked.

“Oh, gods,” Rodric groaned.

“This way.” Brice pointed in the direction it seemed her screams came from, freeing the dirk at his side and hoping it would be enough to fend off a boar. Of all the trouble she could’ve found herself in, this was perhaps the most dangerous to all of them.

“Did ye hear her?” Quinn came on the run, his own blade in one hand.

“Aye, what do ye think?” Brice shoved his way past Quinn, focusing as much concentration as possible on Alana’s screams and the direction from which they’d come. “Where are ye, Alana? Tell us where!”

Silence. Even the birds had halted in their singing.

“Oh, gods,” Quinn groaned.

Brice held his breath, straining to hear even the slightest sound. There was rustling coming from somewhere ahead of them, but exactly where it came from was impossible to tell. His eyes were becoming accustomed to the darkness, bringing the shapes of the trees around him into sharper focus.

“I climbed a tree!”

Brice closed his eyes momentarily when he heard her voice, thanking whoever or whatever was keeping her safe for the time being.

“Stay where ye are!” he called out, his voice steady, his head moving back and forth as once again he tried to determine where her shouts came from. “Where is the boar?”

“He’s—” She shrieked, then continued, “He’s rubbing his tusks against the tree!”

“Are ye high up?” Rodric asked, dirk at the ready.

“As high as I can go,” she whimpered. “Please, please, come!”

“Be calm, lass,” Brice advised, his palms slick with sweat. Sweat ran down the back of his neck and the sides of his face. “Hold on and stay as still as you can.”

It amazed him that the creature did not turn and charge at the sound of his voice, but he’d seen Alana, and caught her scent, and was determined to have her.

“Brice? Rodric?” Fergus’s voice came from Brice’s left, far enough that Brice could not make out his brother’s form.

“Where are ye?” Rodric asked.

“I see her from where I’m standing,” Fergus explained, an edge of strain in his voice, carrying both a dirk and a thin sword he’d claimed as his own after taking it from a dead Norwegian. He might be able to defend himself if the beast charged him, but Brice did not wish to find out whether it was possible.

Nor did his brother, like as not.

“Stay where you are until we’re a bit closer,” Brice instructed, choosing his steps carefully as they made their way through the thick brush between the trees. If one of them stumbled or fell, the boar might easily overtake them.

Alana whimpered. “I’m losing my grip!”

“No, you are not,” Brice commanded, keeping his voice steady in spite of his growing panic. “We’re almost with ye.”

“There.” Rodric pointed to where one of the trees shook slightly, some of its leaves falling every time it did. It was a relief.

“All right. We see ye,” Brice said. “Hold on. Whatever you do, just hold on.”

“Brice?” Fergus asked.

“We’re going to have to frighten it off,” Quinn whispered at Brice’s elbow. “If we lure it away, it’ll tear through us on its way.”

Brice could see the boar, and Quinn was clearly correct. The beast was enormous, full-grown and enraged because it couldn’t reach the lass in the tree. It butted the trunk, causing more leaves to fall and prying a dismayed whimper from Alana.

“Just a bit longer,” he told her, his hand tightening around the dirk.

“Rocks,” Rodric decided, bending swiftly to fetch one from the ground by his feet. “If we hit it, it may run away from us.”

“And if it runs toward us?” Brice asked.

“That’s what the blades are for,” he replied, handing another rock to Brice. Large, with a good weight to it.

“Fergus? Follow my voice. We’re going to pelt it with rocks. I don’t want it to run at you while it’s trying to get away from us.”

Brice heard Fergus’s footfalls as he did just that, twigs snapping underfoot.

The boar turned at the sound, as though it had only just noticed the presence of others in the vicinity.

“Fergus! Look out!” Brice threw the rock with all his might as the boar took off in Fergus’s direction, hoping against hope to steer the beast off course.

Many things happened at once.

Alana’s screams filled the air, mixing with Fergus’s shouts.

The boar’s grunts somehow rose above it all.

Brice ran in a blind panic, some small part of his mind warning against such panic though there was no hope of avoiding it. His brother. His brother!

“Where are you?” he screamed, charging through the brush, low-hanging branches tearing at his face and hair as he ran heedlessly through it all.

“Here.” Fergus stumbled toward him, one hand clutching the other arm. “Killed the bastard. Sword through his neck.”

Sure enough, the beast’s body was behind him, the blood pooling on the mossy ground.

That was nothing compared to the blood dripping from between Fergus’s fingers. Brice didn’t dare lift those fingers for fear of releasing the pressure over the wound, but it was clear damage had been done.

“Quickly.” Rodric put an arm around Fergus’s waist and led him away, into a clearing where there would be better light to see by. “Quinn, go back to the horses and fetch the water and the bundle of herbs and treatments.”

Brice stood there for a moment that might as well have been an eternity, his chest heaving in great gasps as he struggled to make sense of what had taken place.

Alana.

He turned and went to the tree, where she was still waiting on one of the lowest limbs. Her body stretched out over it, feet dangling on either side, arms wrapped around it. She’d closed her eyes.

“All is well, lass. Come down.” He extended his hands to her, amazed at the calm tone of his voice when he wanted nothing more than to shout every obscenity he knew.

Her eyes opened, blinked. “It’s gone?” she whimpered.

“Aye. It’ll not harm ye. Come on.” He touched her ankle. “I’ll help ye.”

She sat up, swinging her left leg behind her to clear the limb. Brice caught her by the waist, lowering her to the ground.

He took her by the arms, holding her in place as he went over her with his eyes. “Are ye injured?”

She merely shook her head.

That was good to know. It would make what was about to come easier on both of them.

The rage he was barely able to rein in broke loose.

“What were ye thinking? Are ye that determined to destroy yourself?” he demanded, and it wasn’t until she let out a groan of discomfort that he realized he was shaking her.

He stopped but maintained his grip on her arms. He could not seem to release them.

Her cheeks were wet, tear-stained. “I wasn’t trying to destroy myself. I was trying to save myself.”

“By putting yourself in terrible danger? Do ye ever think before you act?”

“You’re hurting me,” she whispered, eyes downcast.

Only then did he loosen his grip, which she slid from. It was all too easy to forget how fragile she was when he was in a fit of anger over her foolishness.

“What’s worse,” he continued, “your actions put us in danger as well.”

“And you would not be able to collect your ransom if I were killed, is that right?” She lifted her head, eyes red but blazing “Isn’t that it?”

He opened his mouth to argue, but nothing came out at first. Her accusation all but took his breath away. Not because she’d hit the truth of the matter, but because he was no longer certain what the truth of the matter was.

When he remembered her screams, his helplessness, his feverish struggle to find her before the boar shredded her—and the images in his mind of just such a thing, of her body torn from head to foot, her face bloodied—he could not in good conscience tell her it was merely the desire to collect a purse full of silver which drove his actions.

He drew a deep breath, the weight of her accusing stare heavy on him, and simply replied, “If ye think all any of us cared about was the price your delivery fetches, ye know nothing. For there’s no amount of silver in the world worth taking on a full-grown boar—even four of us against one of it is still too unbalanced a fight. I might have lost my brother today, because of your foolishness.”

She recoiled as though he’d slapped her, then shook her head as if to shake off the blow. The fury drained from her eyes, then from her body, leaving her shoulder slumped in defeat. “I am heartily sorry to have placed any of you in danger. And I am sorry for Fergus’s wounds. You are right: I never thought of what might come of my running away. I did not believe you would come looking for me as you did.”

“Why would we not?” He scratched his head, aware that he’d likely leave boar’s blood behind but brushing aside the realization. “For sure, it was the thought of losing our purse which spurred us on. I can admit that. But when you screamed, it was a different matter, lass.”

He sat down, suddenly near the point of exhaustion. His blood had been up higher than he could remember since his days in the army, and he knew from that experience that once the thrill of the fight passed, bone-tiredness would follow.

“There’s something ye must know about us if we’re going to travel together,” he murmured, looking off to where his brother’s blood had spattered the ground before the wound was treated. He couldn’t seem to take his eyes from it.

If Fergus had died because his brother had been foolish enough to keep the lass’s attempted escape a secret…

“What is it?” she prompted, pulling his thoughts back to the present.

“We’re not animals.” He glanced her way with a snort of derision. “No matter what ye think of us, how cold or heartless ye believe we are, it simply isn’t the case. We do what we do for pay, aye, but not because we wish to see anyone hurt or made poorer for knowing us. We aren’t thieves, we aren’t scavengers. And not one of us would think twice about helping a lass in need of saving, even if it came at a price.”

He jerked his head in his brother’s direction, where Rodric double-checked the bandage around Fergus’s arm. “There’s your proof.”

She looked at Fergus, her mouth pulling down at the corners.

“He’s lucky he can still move it, that it’s still attached,” Brice continued, seeing the effect his words had on her. He wasn’t trying to rub salt in her wound so much as he was willing to do or say anything that would get her to quit her stubborn foolishness. “And he’ll be luckier still if the wound doesn’t become infected. We’ll need to keep a watch on him, be aware of any signs of fever. Help him change his bandages and clean his arm.”

“I’ll do that,” she offered, all but jumping at the chance. “I will watch over him, if you’ll allow it.”

“And how do I know ye won’t purposefully try to harm him?” he asked, tilting his head to the side.

“I’m not an animal, either.” She squared her shoulders and straightened her spine before marching off to where Fergus sat. She crouched beside him, murmuring, asking questions.

A far braver lass than he’d given her credit for.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Alexa Riley, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Elizabeth Lennox, Leslie North, Sophie Stern, Amy Brent, Frankie Love, C.M. Steele, Jordan Silver, Bella Forrest, Madison Faye, Dale Mayer, Jenika Snow, Mia Ford, Michelle Love, Kathi S. Barton, Delilah Devlin, Sloane Meyers, Piper Davenport, Penny Wylder,

Random Novels

Gone With The Ghost (Murder By Design Book 1) by Erin McCarthy

All This Love (Seven Brides Seven Brothers Pelican Bay Book 3) by Belle Calhoune

Hierax: Star Guardians, Book 4 by Ruby Lionsdrake

The Twin Sheikhs by Goldman, Kate

Seducing the Virgin (Sold to The Billionaire MFM Romance #1) by J.L. Beck

First Time (Pure Omega Love Book 1) by Preston Walker

Taken by the Dom: A Light BDSM Bad Boy Romance by Dee, Cassandra, Ford, Katie

Undeniable (Damaged Elite Book 1) by K. Renee

Operation Mayhem Boxed Set: Military Romance boxed set Books 1 - 3 by Lindsay Cross

Beauty Unmasked by AJ Renee

Mail Order Sass by Alix West

Scratch and Win Shifters: Libby (Lovebites Lottery Book 1) by Kate Kent

Don't Walk Away: A Second Chance Fake Fiance Romance by Eva Luxe, Juliana Conners

Damaged Goods: The Redemption Series by L. Wilder

When It's Right by Denault, Victoria

Cipriani's Innocent Captive by Cathy Williams

Ghost: A Bad Boy Second Chance Romance (Black Reapers Motorcycle Club Book 5) by Jade Kuzma

Peach Tree Love: Gay Romance by Trina Solet

Hell's Bells: Lucifer's Tale (Welcome to Hell Book 6) by Eve Langlais

Hard Reality (Notus Motorcycle Club Book 5) by Debra Kayn